St. Mary Bank & Trust Co. v. Sims

6 Teiss. 311, 1909 La. App. LEXIS 100
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1909
DocketNo. 4616
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Teiss. 311 (St. Mary Bank & Trust Co. v. Sims) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Mary Bank & Trust Co. v. Sims, 6 Teiss. 311, 1909 La. App. LEXIS 100 (La. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

This was a suit against one of the joint makers of a promissory note. The answer is that the defendant’s firm .name was signed to the note by one of the members of the firm “without the knowledge or consent of any other member of said firm; that this act was never approved or ratified by said firm or any other member thereof; that said firm derived no benefit or advantage from the maker of said note; that no member of firm ever derived any benefit or advantage from said :act; that said note was not drawn by said James M. Simms (one of the members of the defendant firm) for the benefit of said firm, but for the sole benefit of Walter Fears, who also signed said note, and to whom was paid by the St. Mary Bank [312]*312the entire sum loaned upon said note, said note being drawn! lor the sole purpose of securing a loan to said Fears for the-sum mentioned in said note; that said James M. Simms signed, the name of the defendant firm to said note as security for said. Fears without the authority from or subsequent ratification by said firm or any member thereof; that the whole transaction was out of the usual course of business of said firm, whose personel and business were well known to the said payee and. its officers and managers.”

There is a demand in reeonvention for damages sustained by reason of the running of a foreign attachment by the plaintiff against the defendant firm in the Parish of St. Mary, which, attachment was subsequently dissolved.

There was judgment in favor of the plaintiff on the main demand for, the amount sued for, and against plaintiff and in favor of defendants on the reconventional demand, for the sum of $150.00, and from this judgment the defendants appeal.

It appears that the defendant firm is a trading co-partnership, and is composed of J. Dallas Simms and his two sons,. James M. Simms and Samuel A. Simms. The note is dated New Iberia on the 10th day of July, 1903; is payable six months after its date to the order of the St. Mary Bank, is for the. sum of $1,550.00, with 8 per cent per annum interest from its date until paid, and 10 per cent attorney’s fees, and is made payable at the New Iberia Bank, in the town of New Iberia. It binds the makers in solido, the said makers being Walter Fears and the defendant firm, both of which makers are shown to be well known dealers and traders in mules in the parishes of Iberia and St. Mary, and the adjoining parishes.

Several days prior to the date of the note, Fears called at the St. Mary Bank in the town of Franklin, and inquired of the officers thereof whether the Bank would discount a note signed by him and the defendant firm. Being answered that the Bank would do so if it were a solidary note, Fears departed, and several days later returned with the note in question, the defendant firm’s signature thereto, as joint makers, being affixed by James M. Simms. The note was then discounted and the net proceeds paid over to Fears.

The cashier of the Bank, Mr. It. Emmett O’Neil, with whom this transaction was made, testified that he knew “that Fears [313]*313was doing a good deal of business with Simms, buying mules and selling mules in New Iberia,” and “that they were doing business together.” ’

Before the maturity of this note this witness said that he heard through Mr. Sam Simms (one of the members of the defendant firm) that Fears had some trouble and had disappeared from the town of New Iberia, whereupon he informed Sam Simms that there would be “no occasion to notify Mr. Walter Fears at New Iberia (as to the maturity of the note) and that he then and there notified Sam Simms that the note in question ‘ ‘ would be due on this date, January 10th,' 1904. ’ ’

He further testified “that Sam Simms made no reply to this notification except that he acquiesced in the fact that the note was to mature then.” (He) made no comment on it.

When the note matured and was not paid, the President of the Bank called the Cashier’s attention to this fact and requested him to see Mr. Sam Simms about the matter, which the Cashier did. He informed him of the fact that the note was past matured and not paid, and requested him • to make arrangements to take it up. Sam Simms answered that he would telephone to his father who was then in New Orleans. Returning a few moments later Sam Simms informed the Cashier that his (Sam Simms) father, the senior member of the defendant firm, wanted to talk to the witness (the Cashier) over the long distance phone. Here is what the latter testified to as to his conversation: “Mr. Simms (J. Dallas Simms) seemed to be very much excited and opened the subject of this Fears note by saying that this note was a forgery, and that he didn’t propose to pay it. I told him I didn’t think it was a forgery, that I believed the signature was all right. He says that Jim never signed a note for that amount. Well, I says, Mr. Simms, did Jim sign a note for any amount ? He said Yes, he signed a note for $350. I said, Mr. Simms, can you tell me the date of that note? He said, Yes, and he gave me a date corresponding with this date, July 10th. I said, Mr. Simms, don’t you think Mr. Jim Simms may have been fooled when he signed that note ? He says, I don’t believe Jim is a fool. .1 says, I don’t mean to say Mr. Jim Simms is a fool, but don’t you think he might have been signing a $1,550 note when he thought he was signing a $350 note? He said, No, that he hadn’t seen this note; that he [314]*314.didn’t intend' to pay it. That that damned son of a bitch (meaning Fears) beat him out of $15,000 and he didn’t propose to lose any more money by him.” •

'Sam Simms denies the interview testified to by the Cashier as having taken’place prior to the maturity of the note. But 'as the Cashier severed his connection with the Bank soon after this transaction and was not in its employ at the time 'his testi•mony was given', and as he has, therefore, no possible interest in this case, his statement necessarily is of greater probative 'value than that of a witness immediately interested.

It is a significant fact that the member of the defendant 'firm, Mr. James M. Simms, who affixed the firm’s signature to the note, did not testify at all in the cause, and his absence is in no manner accounted for. Equally' significant is the fact that the senior member of the firm is not interrogated and, therefore, does not testify concerning the alleged unauthorized employment of the defendant firm’s signature affixed to the note by his son and co-partner, James M. Simms, or to the fact that the note was not executed for a partnership transaction. The sole testimony on this point is that of Mr. Sam Simms, and it is found solely and alone in answer to an interrogatory in chief as follows:

“Q. Mr. Simms, did your firm ever receive any benefit from the signing of this note?
' “A. No, sir.”

It is a well settled principle of law that the borrowing of money and negotiation of bills and notes are incident to and usual in the business of a co-partnership formed for the purpose of trading, and that where a co-partner borrows money professedly for. the firm and executes therefor a negotiable instrument in the co-partnership name, it will bind all the partners, whether the borrowing were really for the firm or not, or whether he diverts or misapplies the funds or not, provided the lender is 'not cognizant of the intended fraud.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Teiss. 311, 1909 La. App. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-mary-bank-trust-co-v-sims-lactapp-1909.